Beyond deadline math: The Eleventh Circuit’s practical take on equitable tolling

Freeman Mathis & Gary
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Freeman Mathis & Gary

In Beazer v. Richmond County Constructors, LLC (Mar. 10, 2026), the Eleventh Circuit held that equitable tolling saved the plaintiff’s Title VII complaint even though the district court received it after the ninety-day right-to-sue deadline. The court concluded that Beazer had plausibly shown both prerequisites for tolling: reasonable diligence and an extraordinary circumstance that prevented timely filing. According to the allegations the court was required to accept at the motion-to-dismiss stage, Beazer tried to retain counsel promptly after receiving the EEOC letter, repeatedly followed up with the attorney who had taken consultation fees (but later declined to take the case), and then immediately prepared and mailed his pro se complaint by Priority Mail Express when the attorney finally declined representation.

The Eleventh Circuit further held that the combined effect of the attorney’s delay and Hurricane Idalia qualified as an extraordinary circumstance beyond Beazer’s control. Although Beazer paid for guaranteed overnight delivery, the storm disrupted conditions in southeast Georgia while the Postal Service was transporting the complaint. Taking a totality-of-the-circumstances approach, the panel rejected a rigid deadline analysis, found no prejudice from the short delay, vacated the dismissal, and remanded for further proceedings.

De Novo review

The standard of review was de novo because the appeal arose from the district court’s grant of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, not from a post-trial or fact-based ruling. At that stage, the court had to treat the complaint’s factual allegations as true and decide a legal question: whether those undisputed allegations were sufficient, as a matter of law, to justify equitable tolling. The panel acknowledged that abuse-of-discretion review sometimes appears in equitable-tolling cases, but explained that those cases involve review of evidentiary findings or trial-level judgments about the weight of the evidence. Here, by contrast, the district court made no factual findings; it simply decided that the facts, as pled, did not permit tolling. That legal determination was therefore reviewed de novo.

Why the opinion matters

For defense lawyers, the opinion is a caution against assuming that a filing-deadline defense will be enforced mechanically when the plaintiff can allege a credible tolling narrative. The Eleventh Circuit emphasized that reasonable diligence does not mean “maximum feasible diligence,” and it viewed the plaintiff’s efforts to retain counsel, follow up, and use expedited mail as enough to survive dismissal. That means defense counsel should be careful about relying on limitations arithmetic alone where the complaint itself pleads facts that make tolling seem equitable.

The opinion also suggests that defense lawyers should focus on undermining the plaintiff’s diligence story and on developing prejudice, not merely on pointing to the missed deadline. The panel noted that the defendant already had notice through the EEOC process and identified no meaningful prejudice from the short delay. Practically, that means defense counsel should try to distinguish the alleged extraordinary circumstance, test causation between the obstacle and the late filing, and build a factual record showing what the plaintiff could realistically have done sooner. It also means counsel should think carefully before pressing a tolling issue exclusively through a motion to dismiss. In some cases, the better strategy will be to preserve the defense, develop the record in discovery, and revisit the issue on summary judgment once the plaintiff’s diligence allegations can be tested against actual evidence.

[View source.]

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